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Citing Sources

Students from an early age need to understand the rights of creators of intellectual property. They also need to develop effective information literacy skills and learn effective methods of citing their sources, both electronic and print.

Citation Guides
  • Citation Styles
    Shows four different citation styles with examples of each for teachers and Early Adolescence to Late Adolescence students.

  • Citation Style Guides for Internet & Electronic Sources
    A concisely written guide on how to cite Internet and electronic information. This guide reminds us that there is no definitive standard as yet and provides a range of examples for students to follow. For teachers and Early Adolescence to Late Adolescence students.

  • Harvard Referencing
    This concisely written Curtin University guide explains why and how to cite printed and electronic information, including email, the World Wide Web and CD-ROMs. For teachers and Early Adolescence to Late Adolescence students.
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Create a Reference List

Citation © Richard Potter
Citation: Referencing System
Version 5
[CD-ROM]
Western Australia : T.W. Potter, 2005

Available from:
T.W. Potter
75 First Avenue, Rossmoyne WA 6148
Ph: (08) 9457 4768
Email: tpotter@westnet.com.au
Single User $77.00 (includes GST)
Site Licence $110.00 (includes GST)


This useful program creates formatted reference lists and bibliographies for all school, university or work-related research assignments and papers. Students simply fill in the information about each reference on the input screen and the program does the rest. The list can be created in Harvard, APA or MLA formats, saved in Rich Text, sorted, added to or individual references amended before printing.

The disk also contains the User Manual, a Guide to Referencing, a master sheet for recording sources, and copies of the input screens in Word format. The recording sheet can be duplicated for student use and the input screens displayed prominently to help students working with the program at the computer.

Citation is easy to use and highly recommended for teachers and Early Adolescence to Late Adolescence students.

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